Kaiama L. Glover,
"Introduction: Why Josephine Baker?"
(page 4 of 4)
The final section of this issue, "From Josephine Baker to Other
'Others,'" considers
Baker in the light of other black or "brown" women navigating the French
public's very particular perspective on and perception of non-White,
non-European persons. Geneviève Fabre, Michel Fabre, Maryse Condé, and
Gretchen Holbrook Gerzina—all world-renowned scholars of the African
American and African Caribbean experience—look at Baker's strategies for
survival and success as they compare with those employed by her
predecessors, her contemporaries, and her heirs, those to whom she owes
a debt for her achievements as well as those for whom she ended up
tracing a path. Geneviève Fabre's "Katherine Dunham on the
French Stage (No Repeat of La Revue Nègre)" evokes the parallels in Baker and
Dunham's biographies and the persistent tendency of Parisians to read
one alongside the other, despite the two women's very different
approaches to performance and to the black American dance tradition. In
"Rediscovering Aïcha, Lucy and D'al-Al, Colored French Stage Artists,"
Michel Fabre offers a hard-won accounting of the lives of three
"uncertainly black" women who, much like Baker, played with exoticist
ethnic and racial stereotypes to build careers in the French capital but
who, unlike Baker, never achieved much more than a moderate degree of
fame. Maryse Condé compares and contrasts Josephine Baker's strategy and
reception with those of the Martinican bourgeois intellectuals Jane and
Paulette Nardal in "Body and Soul: Josephine, Jane, and Paulette" (a
talk we've also chosen to include as it was delivered during the
conference). Condé presents here some thoughts on the why of the Nardal
sisters' popular neglect as compared with the unmitigated celebrity of
their contemporary, Josephine. Also included in this section is a video
of Gretchen Gerzina's multimedia presentation, "After Josephine: Black
American Women in the French Music Scene." Gerzina moves beyond Baker in
her presentation to recount the life choices of black American women
entertainers who, decades after the Josephine Baker sensation had left
town, sought to create their own fairy tale in a very different Paris.
Part 6 closes with "And She Set the Stage for Us," a performance tribute
to Josephine Baker featuring eight "brown" women tap dancers from the
Studio Museum in Harlem's "Hoofer's House" program. A medley of
improvised numbers more and less inspired by Baker's legacy, the dancers
performed this homage as a visible example of the resonance of Baker's
spirit in the black female dance tradition as it continues to develop
today.
Both the colloquium and this issue of S&F Online were a thrill
to put together. With a birthday party as the foundation and a bona fide
superstar as main attraction, how could it not have been? But beyond
allowing me to indulge my longstanding star-struck fascination with this
marvelous woman, Josephine Baker: A Century in the Spotlight
satisfied my desire as a brown female intellectual and admitted
Francophile to consider—from a variety of highly original
perspectives—France's relationship to the "Others" in its midst.
Questions of race and gender, of the exotic and the erotic, of inclusion
and exclusion, of art, celebrity, and political engagement were all
raised and addressed, if not answered, by the brilliant scholars I had
the privilege of working with on this project. And I am very content to
say that in the end, though Baker was perhaps the one on stage, it was
truly the whole of the twentieth century in the transatlantic world that
we were able to fix in the spotlight.
Enjoy the show.
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